TUPELO, MS, UNITED STATES

10.16.2016

Tupelo, Miss.—Warrant Officer Jessica McCormick has a rich military career, now highlighted by becoming the first female Apache helicopter pilot in the Mississippi Army National Guard.
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McCormick graduated the Army Aviation School at Fort Rucker, Ala., on Sept. 29, 2016.

“I never set out to be the first female to do something. I’ve always been really headstrong,” she said. “It was a lot of weight on my shoulders because if I failed it would be like all females failed because I was the one and only from Mississippi.”‬

McCormick is stationed with Company A, 1st Battalion, 149th Aviation Regiment in Tupelo, Miss.‬, which flies the AH-64D Apache Longbow.
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“I can see her having a great impact on the Alpha Company, Punishers, and the Mississippi National Guard,” said 1st Lt. Rudy James Pyron, company commander.

‪McCormick did not always want to be a Mississippi National Guard Apache pilot.

“I guess I always wanted to be a police officer,” said McCormick, an Amory, Miss. native. “I talked to a Marine recruiter one day. He said, ‘You know you can be a police officer in the Marine Corps,’ and before I knew it I enlisted in the Marine Corps.”

She started her Marine Corps career in 2003 as a military police officer stationed at Camp Pendleton, Calif., and deployed twice in 2004-2005 and 2005-2006 to Iraq during her four years of active duty.‬
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She enlisted in the Mississippi National Guard as a military police officer a year after her separation, said McCormick, known as Jessi to her peers.‬

‪“I missed that sense of family and camaraderie (that you find in the military),” she said.

During her time in the National Guard, McCormick has deployed twice - to Iraq in 2009-2010 as a military police officer with the Clinton-based 114th Military Police company, and to Afghanistan in 2013 as a public affairs sergeant with the Jackson-based 102d Public Affairs Detachment.
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As a public affairs sergeant, McCormick patrolled with the infantry and documented key leader meetings with photographs, some of which were published in national and international publications, which helped keep media attention on the U.S. mission in Afghanistan.

“On my Afghanistan deployment, I was flying around, feet dangling out the side of a Black Hawk (helicopter),” said McCormick.‬

She decided then she wanted to be a pilot and began to plot her career path to get there. Since only officers could become pilots, her first step was to become one.‬

‪Her future plans for civilian life will be to put her piloting skill to use for a law enforcement agency, said McCormick. She will finish her Bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of Mississippi in 2017. She would also like to work with combat veterans.‬

McCormick has served in the armed forces for nearly 14 years. While she has held a variety of positions with the military, her recent achievement of becoming the first female in MSARNG to be an Apache helicopter pilot stands out as one of her biggest accomplishments.